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Dosage Form Design Lecture 5 Dr. Athmar Dhahir Habeeb PhD in Industrial pharmacy and drug delivery athmar1978@uomustansiriyah.edu.iq athmar1978@yahoo.com athmar.habeeb.12@ucl.ac.uk Chapter 4 \ Dosage Form Design: Pharmaceutical and Formulation Considerations علاطلأل ObjectivesAfter reading this chapter, the student will be able to: 1. List reasons for the incorporation of drugs into various dosage forms 2. Compare and contrast the advantages/disadvantages of various drug dosage forms 3. Describe the information needed in preformulation studies to characterize a drug substance for possible inclusion into a dosage form 4. Describe the mechanisms of drug degradation and provide examples of each 5. Describe the five types of drug instability of concern to the practicing pharmacist 6. Describe the purpose and general protocol for accelerated stability studies 7. Summarize approaches employed to stabilize drugs in pharmaceutical dosage forms 8. Calculate rate reactions for various liquid dosage forms 9. Categorize various pharmaceutical ingredients and excipients Introduction Drug substances are seldom administered alone; rather they are given as part of a formulation in combination with one or more nonmedicinal agents )pharmaceutical ingredients or excipients (that serve varied and specialized pharmaceutical functions and formulate different dosage forms. The general area of study concerned with the formulation, manufacture, stability, and effectiveness of pharmaceutical dosage forms is termed pharmaceutics. Theproperdesignandformulationofa dosageformrequires 1. consideration of the physical, chemical, and biologic characteristics of all of the drug substances andpharmaceutical ingredients to be used in fabricating the product. 2. The drug and pharmaceutical materials must be compatible with one another to produce a drug product that is stable, efficacious, attractive, easy to administer, and safe. 3. The product should be manufactured with appropriate measures of quality control and packaged in containers that keep the product stable. 4. The product should be labelled to promote correct use and be stored under conditions that contribute to maximum shelf life. The need for dosage forms The potent nature and low dosage of most drugs in use today precludes (not permits) any expectation that general public could safely obtain the appropriate dose of a drug from the bulk material. Most drug substances are administered in milligram quantities, much too small to be weighed on anything but a sensitive prescription or electronic analytical balance. When the dose of the drug is minute, solid dosage forms such as tablets and capsules must be prepared with filler or diluents so that the dosage unit is large enough to pick upwith the fingertips. Besides providing the mechanism for the safe and convenient delivery of accurate dosage, dosage forms are needed for additional reasons: 1. To provide for the safe and convenient delivery of accurate dosage 2. To protect the drug substance from the destructive influences of atmospheric oxygen or humidity (coated tablets, sealed ampoules) 3. To protect the drug substance from the destructive influence of gastric acid after oral administration (enteric coated tablets)
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